4.7 Article

The relative contribution of non-selection and selection processes in marine benthic assemblages

Journal

MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 163, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marenvres.2020.105223

Keywords

Macrofauna; Meiofauna; Simulation; Niche breadth; Environmental boundary; Environmental filtering; Dispersal

Funding

  1. Sao Paulo Research Foundation [FAPESP -2016/10810-8, 2017/17071-9, 2018/22036-0]
  2. Brazilian National Council of Technological and Scientific Development [CNPQ 150316/2018-6]
  3. FAPESP under Project Biodiversidade e funcionamento de um ecossistema costeiro subtropical: subsidios para gestao integrada [2011/50317-5]
  4. CNPQ [306558/2010]

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The study examined the distribution of marine meiofaunal nematodes and macrofauna in relation to environmental limitations, finding that selection processes were the primary driver for both assemblages with rare species playing a significant role. It was also discovered that the total number of species explained by non-selection processes was 27% higher in nematodes compared to macrofauna, highlighting the importance of a species-level approach in determining the contribution of selection and non-selection assembly processes.
We tested the hypothesis that the ubiquity of marine meiofaunal nematodes and their indiscriminate passive dispersal create assemblages that are less limited by its environment; whereas the relatively smaller population sizes of macrofauna, associated with their ability to track environmental conditions before settlement, renders their distribution more environmentally-restricted. We compared the empirical distribution of macrofauna and nematode species with that of communities simulated under different assumptions of selection (e.g. environmental filtering) and non-selection (e.g. dispersal limitation) processes. Selection processes were the prime driver of both meioand macrofauna assemblages, with rare species strongly contributing to this component. The total number of species explained by non-selection processes was 27% higher in nematodes than in macrofauna. Our results underline the importance of a species-level approach to determine the contribution of selection and non selection assembly processes. Moreover, they highlight the important yet overlooked role of dispersal and stochastic processes in determining species dynamics.

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